63 RECON Posted July 6, 2019 Author Share #326 Posted July 6, 2019 James Marsden as Cmdr Quince in "2 Guns" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 6, 2019 Share #327 Posted July 6, 2019 James Garner, Julie Andrews and James Coburn in "The Americanization of Emily" (1964) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 6, 2019 Share #328 Posted July 6, 2019 ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 6, 2019 Share #329 Posted July 6, 2019 ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 6, 2019 Share #330 Posted July 6, 2019 ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patches Posted July 7, 2019 Share #331 Posted July 7, 2019 Good ones aerial. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
439th Signal Battalion Posted July 11, 2019 Share #332 Posted July 11, 2019 "Mean Streets" movie, 1973. CIB, SS, BSM, PH, Good Conduct Medal, Vietnam Service, Vietnam Campaign. I also looked at his Class A jacket as well in the following scenes. Two hash marks for overseas duty were present on his right sleeve with a combat patch for a unit that I couldn't quite make out on the right shoulder. I am going out on a hunch here, but I'd say that someone who worked on that film served with the 199th LIB in Vietnam and put the Redcatcher patch on there for exposure. For one, it's a bit off center with the Corporal rank as if it has been quickly tacked on and two, the 199th LIB was a small, Brigade sized unit created specifically for duty in Vietnam. As such, the entire Brigade, save for its stateside creation in mid-1966, was in Vietnam for its entire tenure of active duty from 66-70. (Hollywood directors always love to put the 101st or 1st Cavalry on film, not one such as the 199th LIB that the general public wouldn't have recognized). Personnel who served in the unit coming home for DEROS would have had the 199th SSI on their right shoulder as a combat patch and not on the left. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 13, 2019 Share #333 Posted July 13, 2019 Thanks, patches. Hollywood legend Rip Torn (aka Elmore Rual Torn, Jr) died this past week (7/9/19) here in LA. Born in Temple, Texas, on 6 February 1931, according to an article the nickname ‘Rip’ was a family tradition but when he broke into acting many Hollywood producers advised him to change it. But Torn figured his name would become an asset: and people would remember it. (I'd say he was right.) After several small parts, he landed a big role in 1957’s Time Limit with Richard Basehart, Richard Widmark, Martin Balsam, June Lockhart and the notorious Khigh Dhiegh, who a decade later became Jack Lord's nemesis, Wo Fat, in the original (and inimitable) Hawaii Five O. RIP, Rip. Thanks for all the great movie and tv memories. Here's Widmark (top) and Torn in publicity shots for Time Limit. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bluehawk Posted July 13, 2019 Share #334 Posted July 13, 2019 Thank you for memorializing Rip Torn.Oddball question:Rip's wristwatch pictured above. Is that GI? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 13, 2019 Share #335 Posted July 13, 2019 Hi, I was happy to do it. He was one of a kind, even for Hollywood. I was wondering about that watch too- I'm pretty sure it's not GI, seems to have a nice black, leather band and maybe 3 stems? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patches Posted July 13, 2019 Share #336 Posted July 13, 2019 Thanks, patches. Hollywood legend Rip Torn (aka Elmore Rual Torn, Jr) died this past week (7/9/19) here in LA. Born in Temple, Texas, on 6 February 1931, according to an article the nickname ‘Rip’ was a family tradition but when he broke into acting many Hollywood producers advised him to change it. But Torn figured his name would become an asset: and people would remember it. (I'd say he was right.) After several small parts, he landed a big role in 1957’s Time Limit with Richard Basehart, Richard Widmark, Martin Balsam, June Lockhart and the notorious Khigh Dhiegh, who a decade later became Jack Lord's nemesis, Wo Fat, in the original (and inimitable) Hawaii Five O. RIP, Rip. Thanks for all the great movie and tv memories. Here's Widmark (top) and Torn in publicity shots for Time Limit. I posted some stills from this movie in Hollywood Patches #2 topic, here with Rip Torn. Posted by patches on 06 June 2012 - 03:59 PM in ARMY AND USAAF First one from the 1957 movie Time Limit, somewhat like the later 1968 movie Sgt Ryker this one deals with Korean War POWs and what they did or did not do under the tender care of the enemy. Here we see both Rip Torn and Martin Balsam going over some details about when Torn,s charactor, a 2nd Division Infantry officer who was captured presumably at Kunu Ri. This movie by the way takes place at and was filmed at Fort Jay on Governers Island, New York City. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 13, 2019 Share #337 Posted July 13, 2019 Thanks, patches. The ribbons were credible in this movie, whether by chance or design. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bluehawk Posted July 14, 2019 Share #338 Posted July 14, 2019 "Yours, mine and ours" (1968) Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patches Posted July 14, 2019 Share #339 Posted July 14, 2019 resized_images-2.jpeg "Yours, mine and ours" (1968) Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball Posted by patches on 02 May 2017 - 09:24 PM in MEDALS & DECORATIONS Henry Fonda as the real life Frank Beardsley, USN in the 1968 film Yours Mine and Ours. Sorry for such a small image, but it's the only one I could find where he's in his Dress Blues where his rack is seen. Got the movie on DVD, so Had to view the movie to get a better view and pause it to see, So what were seeing is ribbons a Purple Heart Medal, Navy Presidential Unit Citation (placed wrong?), Navy Good Conduct Medal w/ 3 Stars (A former EM for a lot of years before becoming a WO) What looks like the Navy Expeditionary Medal (placed wrong?), American Campaign Medal, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal, WWII Victory Medal, Navy Occupation Medal, China Service Medal (placed wrong?) National Defense Service Medal, Korean Service Medal, and the UN Korea Service Medal, his rate in flim was Chief Aerographer. They did a good enough job as we see, however, unknown if these are the actually awards of the real Frank Beardsley, and the film was based losly as you'll see in the wiki link. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patches Posted July 14, 2019 Share #340 Posted July 14, 2019 Even posted the 2005 remake with Dennis Quade and his rack, along with co star David Koechner. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 15, 2019 Share #341 Posted July 15, 2019 Here's Dennis Quaid from the remake. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Linedoggie Posted July 15, 2019 Share #342 Posted July 15, 2019 I forgot which John Wayne film this was, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon? Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk "She wore a Yellow Ribbon" Captain Brittles reading the inscription on the gold watch that G troop got for him Lest we Forget Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Linedoggie Posted July 15, 2019 Share #343 Posted July 15, 2019 The recolored version of Rio Grande Nope, "She wore a Yellow Ribbon" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Linedoggie Posted July 15, 2019 Share #344 Posted July 15, 2019 Sgt O'Rourke from SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON. Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk "Fort Apache" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lee Ragan Posted July 15, 2019 Share #345 Posted July 15, 2019 Have you ever wondered while watching one of these old "Cavalry", movies; where did they get the logs to build a stockaded fort when there are no trees around? Truth is, there were few stockaded fort on the western frontier and those were in the north country with lots of timber. A much more accurate depiction of a frontier Army post is in "Son of the Morning Star". I won't even get into the inaccuracies in the uniforms we see in most of these old John Wayne Cavalry movies. However, they were very much fun to watch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bluehawk Posted July 15, 2019 Share #346 Posted July 15, 2019 Have you ever wondered while watching one of these old "Cavalry", movies; where did they get the logs to build a stockaded fort when there are no trees around? Truth is, there were few stockaded fort on the western frontier and those were in the north country with lots of timber. A much more accurate depiction of a frontier Army post is in "Son of the Morning Star"... I HAD wondered that, actually! Before now, I just chalked it up to another engineering miracle by the Corps of Engineers! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 16, 2019 Share #347 Posted July 16, 2019 I saw these several years ago and took these photos. Probably pretty high up on the list of cross-over military movie memorabilia and medal or uniform collecting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 16, 2019 Share #348 Posted July 16, 2019 Well, I'll tell ya', pilgrim... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aerialbridge Posted July 16, 2019 Share #349 Posted July 16, 2019 According to Patrick Wayne, Duke's 3rd child, who just turned 80 (7/15/39), "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949), the second of John Ford's cavalry trilogy, was his father's favorite movie of those he starred in. Duke was 41 when the movie was made and he was praised for his realistic portrayal of the 60-year-old cavalry captain Nathan Brittles. Astride his horse, Brittles accepts a silver watch and chain from his men, having to put on his spectacles and choking up, as he reads the engraving in front of the silent troopers, “To Capt. Brittles — from C Troop … Lest we forget.” The line is from Kipling's poem, "Recessional". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
firefighter Posted July 16, 2019 Share #350 Posted July 16, 2019 Well, I'll tell ya', pilgrim... Cool stuff Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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